Serena, Djokovic nursing injuries

Published 11:45 pm, Friday, August 26, 2016

The U.S. Open's top seeds in both singles brackets are coming off injuries, and neither has played since an early loss at the Olympics. Friday was the first time either had discussed the health problems that stymied them in Rio de Janeiro and forced them to withdraw from the hard-court warmup at Cincinnati.

For Williams, it's a sore right shoulder that she revealed started bothering her almost immediately after her Wimbledon victory. She said she practiced for just two days before the Olympics and has spent little time on court since as she undergoes physical therapy.

For Djokovic, it's a sore left wrist that he revealed he hurt in Rio a few days before his first-round Olympic loss to Juan Martin del Potro, a player who knows plenty about how that injury hinders a righty's two-handed backhand.

"I'm just hoping that Monday when the tournament starts I'll be able to get as close to the maximum of executing my backhand shot as possible," said Djokovic, who sounded a bit more optimistic than Williams on Friday.

Williams acknowledged she'd prefer to have played more coming into the Open — she's had just three singles matches since Wimbledon — and needs to practice more.

"I'm just now starting to feel a little better," she said. "Hopefully just every day I will keep going higher."

It wasn't a physical problem that burdened Djokovic during his third-round Wimbledon loss to 41st-ranked Sam Querrey, he acknowledged. Asked that day if he was 100 percent healthy, the 12-time major champ replied: "Not really. But it's not the place and time to talk about it."

On Friday, Djokovic conceded "it was some other things that I was going through privately." He wouldn't elaborate other than to say that now "everything is fine."

Speaking of left wrist injuries, Rafael Nadal said his keeps getting better but still isn't 100 percent.

Both Djokovic and Williams face a former Grand Slam semifinalist in the first round. Williams opens her bid for a record-breaking 23rd major title against Ekaterina Makarova.

The Russian made two straight major semis — at the 2014 U.S. Open, losing to Williams 6-1, 6-3, and the 2015 Australian Open. Her ranking has slipped to 36th.

Djokovic meets Jerzy Janowicz, a 2013 Wimbledon semifinalist who's been ranked as high as 14th. After struggling in recent years and missing much of this season because of injuries, Janowicz is No. 228.